Thursday, June 1, 2017

We Visited Rio de Janeiro 25 to 28 Apr and 15 to 17 May

View of Rio from Sugar Loaf Mountain

After a very long and exhausting journey of 26
hours we landed in the magical city of Rio at 1430 in the afternoon of 25 Apr. We
were extremely lucky to have visited Brazil in the months of April and May, the
weather was perfect for sightseeing, lazing around on the beach and enjoying
the open street cafes sipping chilled beer. The temperature varied from a high
of 26 to a comfortable 16 deg C at night. There were a few light showers in the
evenings to cool the city down. We checked in to IBIS Hotel in Nova America, an
up market and modern locality.

Nova America

At the banana bar Nova America

From the hotel

Rio is a very old city developed around the
Guanabara Bay. The Portuguese first encountered Guanabara Bayon 1 January 1502, hence “Rio de Janeiro” or
"January River" (it does not exist). From 1565 to 1889 it remained
under the rule of Portugal. In 1808, when the Portuguese Royal court
transferred itself from Portugal to Brazil, Rio de Janeiro became the chosen
seat of the court of Queen Maria I. Rio has the distinction of being the only
European capital outside of Europe. During the Napoleonic period a large number
of Portuguese, especially the noble men relocated to Rio. During the same
period, a very large number of slaves were brought in from Africa to work in
the sugar plantations and gold mines. Rio de Janeiro is home to the largestPortuguesepopulation outside of Lisbonin Portugal. The Black community was
formed by residents whose ancestors had been brought as slaves, mostly from Angola
or Mozambique.Today Rio is a mixture of White – 52 %, Pardo 37 % (tri-racial)and Black 12 %.At the time of European contact,
some of theindigenous peoplewere traditionally mostly semi- nomadic
tribes who subsisted on hunting,
fishing andmigrant
agriculture. There are about 240 indigenous tribes living
in Brazil today, totaling around 900,000 people, or 0.4% of Brazil’s
population. The indigenous population rapidly declined during the Portuguese
rule.

Guanabara Bay, from Sugar loaf Mountain. One has to take a cable car ride to reach the top

Another View

The city

When you sit in open cafes or travel on their
metro you can see multi hued people, Rio truly represents a rainbow of different
colours, races and culture. Unlike some countries it is very difficult to pin
point a person and say he has Brazilian features. Rio is a mixed bagof different cultures, which in turn makes it vibrant and interesting.

At Lapa Botica da Garrafa bar

The city itself is very huge, extremely well
laid out, clean and the roads are excellent. The people go about their business
in a leisurely fashion, dressed in anything from shorts to formal wear. There
is Latino music everywhere to be heard. Football fields areplentyand one can see
children enjoying a game late into the night. Food is plentiful and very
reasonable. Helpings are really huge. A litre of petrol cost 68 Rs and the
radio taxis are very reasonable and safe. We used taxis very extensively as it
worked out well for the four of us. Language is a big problem. Not everyone
knows English and as a result we had to use Google translator (which worked out
well for us)constantly to seek directions, order food etc.

With the school girl who helped us navigate the metro

The people are very helpful and go out of their
way to assist. Rio has a very efficient and well planned metro interconnecting
various parts of the city. We used it a number of times. The police and the
security staff are very smart, well dressed and make their presence felt. For
the coffee fans, there is a variety of coffee to choose from, for their daily
fix. There are a number of Cambios for exchange of currency. Carry USD and
convert them to Real – R$ as and when required. 1 R$ = 20INR approximate.

We enjoyed visiting Lapa
on the very first night. Instead of resting in the hotel we decided to hit the
most happening place in Rio for night life - Lapa. It is known for its lively
social scene and cultural events. The neighborhood comes alive in the evening
with many road side cafes serving beer and local cuisine. The mood is eclectic and
care free; no one to ask you how you’re dressed, what you are eating and so on.

The second day we headed
out to the famous Copacabana beach and spent the whole day enjoying its beauty.
The 5 km of white sandy beach is complimented by the deep blue of the Atlantic
Ocean. In the backdrop are the thickly wooded mountains providing an intoxicating
aura of romance and endless possibilities on the beach. People with a flair for
mathematics will find enough shapes and sizes to whet their scientific minds.
In the evening, various bands come alive on the beach with light displays. The
entire beach is cleaned at 6PM from end to end. Running, beach volley ball and
football are very popular. Incidentally we had lovely SKOL beer. They provide
beer in a plastic outer container to keep it chilled for a longer period.

Pristine white sand

Immaculate and clean Promenade

Sand sea and the mountains

Sugar Loaf from the sea

The ladies in blue and white complementing the beauty of Atlantic

Amazing shades of blue

Samba music in the cafe

Photo op for Sushama

Beer in a container

With our English travel friends

As the sun set

Thereafter we went across
to Rio Scenarium, which is not only popular in Lapa but also in Rio. It is
so popular that one needs to book a table in advance. Listed by The Guardian, as among the 10 best
nightclubs in the world, Rio
Scenarium is the temple of samba music. The place also showcases old
artifacts on its high walls. No wonder the girls went on the floor and joined
others in gay abandon, dancing and frolicking. They had to be literally pulled
out of the restaurant. Late into the night, we returned to the hotel happy and
all giddy headed.

Antique clocks adorning the wall

With mannequins

She sang non stop for an hour

It cannot get any better

All are floored

No end to their dancing

The whole of the next day
was spent visiting the famous tourist attractions of Rio and driving around the
city. The statue of ‘Christ the Redeemer’ is breathtaking and so is Sugar Loaf
Mountain. The view of Rio from these places is something to be cherished
forever. We saw a notorious ‘Favela” from a distance. It means ‘slum’ in
Portuguese. It is a low-income informal urban area in Brazil.

I have placed an unusually
large number of photographs of Rio in this blog, as they convey the essence of
this charming city.

At Sugar Loaf Mountain

At Sugar loaf Mountain. This cable car was specially made for Bond Film "Moonraker" to depict a fight in the car with Jaws the metal eater.

A view from the mountain

With the other Viator travelers

An amazing opportunity

Christ the Redeemer in Rio, created by French sculptor Paul Landowski and built by the Brazilian engineer Heitor da Silva Costa,The statue is 30 metres (98 ft) tall, not including its 8-meter (26 ft) pedestal, and its arms stretch 28 metres (92 ft) wide.rather than depict Christ with a cross, Da Silva Costa designed to resemble a cross with his outstretched arms.

This crazy and colorful tiled stairway is the work of Chilean artist Jorge Seleron. In 1990, Selarón began renovating dilapidated steps that ran along the front of his house.There are 215 steps measuring 125 metres long which are covered in over 2000 tiles collected from over 60 countries around the world. Selarón was found dead January 10, 2013, on the famous Lapa steps.

Mera Bharat Mahan

Brazilian street art,spread all over the city depicting all aspects of nature and life.In March 2009, the Brazilian government passed law 706/07 which decriminalizes street art. In Rio de Janeiro, the street art is ubiquitous. It exists in all corners of the city from the favela to upper class neighborhoods, from residential to institutional. It is bold in scale and aesthetics, and is anything but graffiti.

Getting ready for Rio Carnival

On our way back in May we
spent a fair amount of time in Nova America, just lazing around and watching people
go by. Our best leisure activity was to sit in well appointed open air cafes
sipping beer and munching Brazilian
delicacies. Try Bohemian or Brahma beer. The house draft beer is good too.
There are a number of good wines for those who prefer it.